Add title in index pages, add reference in story
[gofetch.git] / test / expected / SLASHDOT / 0102640274
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1 PROFESSOR WHO COINED TERM 'NET NEUTRALITY' THINKS IT'S TIME TO \r
2 BREAK UP FACEBOOK (THEVERGE.COM) \r
3\r
4 Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:30PM (BeauHD)\r
5 from the easier-said-than-done dept.\r
6\r
c715ea02 7 o Reference: 0102640274\r
299a08f3
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8 o News link: https://news.slashdot.org/story/18/09/06/2043213/professor-who-coined-term-net-neutrality-thinks-its-time-to-break-up-facebook\r
9 o Source link: https://www.theverge.com/2018/9/4/17816572/tim-wu-facebook-regulation-interview-curse-of-bigness-antitrust\r
10\r
11\r
12 pgmrdlm shares a report from The Verge: Best known for coining\r
13 the phrase "net neutrality" and his book The Master Switch:\r
14 The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Wu has a new book\r
15 coming out in November called The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust\r
16 in the New Gilded Age. In it, he argues compellingly for a\r
17 return to aggressive antitrust enforcement in the style of\r
18 Teddy Roosevelt, saying that Google, Facebook, Amazon, and\r
19 other huge tech companies are a threat to democracy as they\r
20 get bigger and bigger. "We live in America, which has a strong\r
21 and proud tradition of breaking up companies that are too big\r
22 for inefficient reasons," Wu told me on this week's Vergecast.\r
23 "We need to reverse this idea that it's not an American\r
24 tradition. We've broken up dozens of companies." "I think if\r
25 you took a hard look at the acquisition of WhatsApp and\r
26 Instagram, the argument that the effects of those acquisitions\r
27 have been anticompetitive would be easy to prove for a number\r
28 of reasons," says Wu. And breaking up the company wouldn't be\r
29 hard, he says. "What would be the harm? You'll have three\r
30 competitors. It's not 'Oh my god, if you get rid of WhatsApp\r
31 and Instagram, well then the whole world's going to fall\r
32 apart.' It would be like 'Okay, now you have some companies\r
33 actually trying to offer you an alternative to Facebook.'"\r
34 Breaking up Facebook (and other huge tech companies like\r
35 Google and Amazon) could be simple under the current law,\r
36 suggests Wu. But it could also lead to a major rethinking of\r
37 how antitrust law should work in a world where the giant\r
38 platform companies give their products away for free, and the\r
39 ability for the government to restrict corporate power seems\r
40 to be diminishing by the day. And it demands that we all think\r
41 seriously about the conditions that create innovation. "I\r
42 think everyone's steering way away from the monopolies, and I\r
43 think it's hurting innovation in the tech sector," says Wu.\r
44\r
45\r
46 ** Safe Harbor (Score:5, Interesting)\r
47 (by Kunedog ( 1033226 ))\r
48\r
49 \r
50 There's a simpler way:\r
51 [1]https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]\r
52 \r
53 If they want to curate content according to their political\r
54 bias, then treat them like the politically-biased media outlets\r
55 they are, legally liable for the content they host, instead of\r
56 platforms under "safe harbor" protections. If they want to\r
57 continue to be treated like platforms, then they can keep their\r
58 hands off their political opponents' speech.\r
59 \r
60 \r
61 \r
62 \r
63 [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMLLlnRCBqg\r
64\r
65 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
66 (by HornWumpus ( 783565 ))\r
67\r
68 \r
69 They're already not 'common carriers' so they really didn't\r
70 lose anything by curating.\r
71 The solution is to reestablish 'common carrier' protections\r
72 for those web forums that deserve it.\r
73\r
74\r
75 ** Re:Safe Harbor (Score:4, Interesting)\r
76 (by pots ( 5047349 ))\r
77\r
78 \r
79 I didn't read the article, but the summary has nothing to do\r
80 with what you're talking about. The issue at hand is\r
81 monopolies and the consequent stifling of innovation and lack\r
82 of competitive pressure, that being the only thing which\r
83 makes our economy work for people instead of against them.\r
84\r
85\r
86 ** Holy Fuck (Score:1)\r
87 (by Anonymous Coward)\r
88\r
89 \r
90 Why do I bother coming here anymore?\r
91\r
92 ** \r
93\r
94 ** Re: (Score:3)\r
95 (by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ))\r
96\r
97 \r
98 We don't even have that anymore.\r
99\r
100\r
101\r
102 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
103 (by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ))\r
104\r
105 \r
106 PHRASING.\r
107\r
108\r
109 ** \r
110\r
111 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
112 (by rojash ( 2567409 ))\r
113\r
114 \r
115 i really wanted to mod this up...but screw this mod point\r
116 rationing here\r
117\r
118\r
119\r
120 ** \r
121\r
122 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
123 (by LostMyBeaver ( 1226054 ))\r
124\r
125 \r
126 I honestly want the monopolies to pretend to strengthen\r
127 democracy.\r
128 \r
129 At this point in time,\r
130 Jeff Bezos owns Amazon and news papers and whatever else\r
131 Satya Nadella is in control of one of the biggest new\r
132 networks (which slashdotters will never see because it's\r
133 through Edge and Bing)\r
134 The Alphabet boys are in control of what almost everyone in\r
135 the world sees\r
136 Zuck and Dorsey could easily control a MASSIVE amount of what\r
137 everyone sees.\r
138 \r
139 What's also important is that most of these people seem to\r
140 have some inkling of wanti\r
141\r
142\r
143 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
144 (by Tyger-ZA ( 1886544 ))\r
145\r
146 \r
147 It's correct that people want one point of access to a thing,\r
148 but nobody really wants a monopoly.\r
149 Assuming that one inevitably leads to the other is part of\r
150 the problem.\r
151 For example, with the video streaming sites, what we really\r
152 need is for them to collaborate on the platform (how you\r
153 login and watch shit) but compete on the content, meaning\r
154 that if you watch American Gods on the shared platform,\r
155 Amazon gets paid a share of your subscription, yet if you\r
156 watch Luke Cage on the same platform , Netflix gets paid\r
157\r
158\r
159 ** \r
160\r
161 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
162 (by LostMyBeaver ( 1226054 ))\r
163\r
164 \r
165 Nope... that was back before we had mass real-time media and\r
166 we didn't fully understand how incredibly fucked the entire\r
167 government was.\r
168 \r
169 Then there was FDR who had the national radio and used it as\r
170 a weapon against others in Washington to give him\r
171 near-dictator powers. And then he completely without\r
172 foresight fucked up the political system in America by\r
173 imposing term limits which meant that politicians who have\r
174 real plans that take more than 8 years to accomplish...\r
175 won't.\r
176 \r
177 When we got TV and had 1-3 channels,\r
178\r
179\r
180 ** Professor? Professor? (Score:2)\r
181 (by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ))\r
182\r
183 \r
184 Professor Who???\r
185\r
186 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
187 (by antdude ( 79039 ))\r
188\r
189 \r
190 Dr. Who! :D\r
191\r
192\r
193 ** How (Score:2)\r
194 (by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ))\r
195\r
196 \r
197 exactly do you break up a company who offers a service for free?\r
198\r
199 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
200 (by pots ( 5047349 ))\r
201\r
202 \r
203 Facebook's service is selling advertising. It is not free,\r
204 they are the #2 advertiser in the world right now (I think\r
205 that's right, but I'm not going to look it up).\r
206\r
207\r
208 ** Facebook, Google, and Apple need to be broken up. (Score:1)\r
209 (by WCMI92 ( 592436 ))\r
210\r
211 \r
212 Microsoft has fallen below the zone they were once in.\r
213\r
214 ** And how would that solve anything for consumers? (Score:3,\r
215 Interesting)\r
216 (by Anonymous Coward)\r
217\r
218 \r
219 Facebook has grown because it offered the best social platform\r
220 for users. The point of social platforms is to connect with\r
221 everyone else. Fragmentation means people needing to belong to\r
222 and check multiple platforms. Trying to force competition won't\r
223 solve any user issues. However, once Facebook stops providing a\r
224 compelling service, people will move on their own. The same as\r
225 they gave up MySpace and the same as they rejected Google+. The\r
226 market chose Facebook and will purge it when time comes.\r
227 The same with Google. There were plenty of entrenched search\r
228 services when Google came to be. Users chose it because it was\r
229 better. The old search services died because they didn't evolve.\r
230 If Google stops being the best fit option, people will go\r
231 somewhere else. They already have choices like Bing and Duck\r
232 Duck Go. As the service is free, people are choosing based on\r
233 functionality, not on price. Those that don't like the privacy\r
234 price of Google are opting for other services. You can't just\r
235 declare another search service is required and then force the\r
236 public to use it so that you can claim to have multiple services\r
237 with comparable market share.\r
238 If people were given a choice of all you can eat steak or beets\r
239 at equal cost, odds are that the majority would choose steak.\r
240 When you remove cost and scarcity, the premium option will\r
241 dominate. Digital services don't have scarcity like physical\r
242 products do. It's a different economy.\r
243\r
244 ** Re: (Score:1)\r
245 (by pots ( 5047349 ))\r
246\r
247 \r
248 > Facebook has grown because it offered the best social\r
249 > platform for users.\r
250 As stated in the summary: Facebook has grown by purchasing\r
251 their competitors. The summary mentions WhatsApp and\r
252 Instagram specifically.\r
253 \r
254 Your comment about the problem with fragmentation is an\r
255 example of why Facebook needs to be broken up by an outside\r
256 entity: they have a natural monopoly, since real competition\r
257 from startups would lead to fragmentation.\r
258 \r
259 I've said this before, but if the government came along and\r
260 broke up the company by splitting off Facebook's front-end\r
261 from its back-end, then we could\r
262\r
263 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
264 (by jrumney ( 197329 ))\r
265\r
266 \r
267 > As stated in the summary: Facebook has grown by purchasing\r
268 > their competitors. The summary mentions WhatsApp and\r
269 > Instagram specifically.\r
270 While this is true, so far they have not bought their\r
271 competitors to shut them down, or to raise prices to the\r
272 detriment of consumers. They are building a monopoly, but\r
273 so far, it is not harmful from an economic perspective,\r
274 and unfortunately I don't think anti-trust law is\r
275 concerned with privacy, so the case for breaking up\r
276 Facebook is not strong.\r
277 Apple would be a much juicier target, especially as they\r
278 recently became the world's first trillion dollar company\r
279 (with Amazon close behind). Splitting out the\r
280\r
281\r
282\r
283 ** ok (Score:1)\r
284 (by Alyks ( 798644 ))\r
285\r
286 \r
287 why do I care about a guy whose biggest contribution to this\r
288 subject is clever phrasing?\r
289\r
290 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
291 (by Zontar The Mindless ( 9002 ))\r
292\r
293 \r
294 > Are you with me Doctor Wu\r
295 > Are you really just a shadow\r
296 > Of the man that I once knew\r
297 > Are you crazy are you high\r
298 > Or just an ordinary guy\r
299 > Have you done all you can do\r
300 > Are you with me Doctor\r
301\r
302\r
303 ** We need open platforms (Score:1)\r
304 (by Karmashock ( 2415832 ))\r
305\r
306 \r
307 These proprietary social networks are bad for free speech.\r
308 I have no problem with facebook, google, twitter, except that\r
309 they concentrate the internet in the hands of a few large\r
310 companies.\r
311 We need open platforms like HTML, TCP/IP, Email, Newsgroups, etc.\r
312 All old retrograde stuff according to the children. But there\r
313 isn't one of these social networks that couldn't be made P2P or\r
314 something that anyone could set up their own personal server for\r
315 that interlinked with each other.\r
316 A 20 dollar raspberry pi could host\r
317\r
318 ** Not a monopoly or required... (Score:2)\r
319 (by Archfeld ( 6757 ))\r
320\r
321 \r
322 I don't like Facebook either but its not a monopoly, nor is it\r
323 required in anyway to use the internet. Anyone could come up\r
324 with the next social network thing anytime now or you can just\r
325 NOT use Facebook. It isn't like an OS or a browser that is\r
326 necessary for use or access to anything. Facebook or Twitter are\r
327 tools of convenience and can easily be done without. If you\r
328 don't like what is being said filter it out or don't use either.\r
329\r
330 ** We had the chance... (Score:2)\r
331 (by erp_consultant ( 2614861 ))\r
332\r
333 \r
334 and blew it...with Microsoft. They should have been broken up\r
335 just like Standard Oil. But they were not and that just created\r
336 a precedent for companies like Facebook and Amazon and Google.\r
337 We reap what we sow.\r
338\r
339 ** Why I posted this (Score:2)\r
340 (by pgmrdlm ( 1642279 ))\r
341\r
342 \r
343 Look, I don't get my news from Facebook. Local, National, World.\r
344 Be it political or otherwise. I don't give a shit about who they\r
345 ban, and who they don't. I don't give a shit on who they censor,\r
346 and who they don't. Just don't care. Face book has purchased the\r
347 following which was competition. At least they didn't kill them.\r
348 They own Tinder, dating. They own Instagram, another form of\r
349 social media. And a couple others were mentioned in the article.\r
350 My profile was not used by that company that tried t\r
351\r
352 ** What the f____ (Score:2)\r
353 (by WolfgangVL ( 3494585 ))\r
354\r
355 \r
356 "Look over here! See? We're thinking about maybe eventually\r
357 doing something someday! (Pay no attention to the massive\r
358 personal data collection feast that\r
359 every-single-damn-corporation and government in the entire\r
360 bloody world is gorging on behind the curtain)"\r
361 WHY do people give so many shits for instabook and facegram?\r
362 It's not something anybody actually needs to begin with. For\r
363 fucks sake. Big tech is not "The internet"... in fact, the case\r
364 has been made that these companies are big evil time eaters that\r
365 p\r
366\r
367 ** Re: (Score:2)\r
368 (by pgmrdlm ( 1642279 ))\r
369\r
370 \r
371 Hell, let's start with the fact that before Facebook, what\r
372 ever. Credit cards are tracked, companies record everything\r
373 you purchase from them. Those company cards on your key\r
374 change to save 3 cents. That is all tracked. And it is all\r
375 shared via companies selling the information\r
376\r
377\r
378\r